Eric Sprott: The Financial System Is a Farce
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- Published on Tuesday, 24 January 2012 08:00
- Written by Eric Sprott and David Baker, Guest Editors, Inside Investing Daily
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Publisher's Note: They call him the "quiet billionaire." He's not as flashy as George Soros or as iconic as politically charged as Bill Koch... but his wealth is just as impressive.
Eric Sprott is one of the greatest natural resource investors on the planet... and we just got access to his brain.
Sprott will be speaking at our annual Natural Resources Investing Summit in Toronto at the end of April. Not only will attendees get to hear his advice on the best way to follow in his golden footsteps, they will also get to shake the icon's hand and chat with him face to face.
It is one more reason this is THE natural resources conference of the year.
To help introduce you to the ideas that made Sprott rich... I've included a recent article (it was published earlier this month) written by the gold and silver guru. It's a stunning piece that gives us even more evidence the market is rigged.
The Financial System Is a Farce
By Eric Sprott & David Baker
2011 was a merry-go-round of more bailouts, more deferrals and more denial. Everyone is tired of the eurozone. It's not fixable. There's too much debt. The politicians don't know what's going on. Nothing has structurally changed.
We're still on the wrong path. There's more global debt than there was a year ago, and it's the same old song: extend and pretend, extend and pretend... around and around we go... and it isn't fun anymore.
Just as we wrote back in October 2007, and again in September 2008, we feel compelled to state the obvious: that the financial system is a farce. It's a complete, cyclical farce that defies all efforts to right itself.
This past year continued the farcical tradition with some notable scandals, deferrals and interventions that underscored the system's continuing addiction to government interference. With the glaring exception of U.S. Treasuries and the U.S. dollar (which are admittedly two of our least favorite asset classes), it was not a year that rewarded stock picking or safe-haven assets.
Many developments during the year bordered on the ridiculous, and despite some positive news out of the U.S., we saw little to test our bearish view. If anything, our view was continually reaffirmed.
Let's start with MF Global. With more than two months passed since the scandal broke, federal officials are still unable to find the estimated US$1.2 billion of missing customer funds.
The whole episode has been a disaster for the CME, the self-regulatory body in charge of making sure the futures brokers play by the rules. Normally in instances of broker bankruptcy, the CME is supposed to backstop client accounts and keep them liquid -- i.e., allow them to continue trading while the bankruptcy gets settled. It never happened in this case.
Client accounts were frozen for weeks. Funds have remained missing for months -- an eternity for clients who were caught short. The great shock was watching how inept and incapable the CME was in 1) preventing the fraud in the first place and 2) recovering client assets during the aftermath.
The CME essentially copped out of their responsibility, offering little more than some perfunctory press releases along the way. They were also surprisingly quick to offer excuses for their non-action.
According to CME, it really wasn't their fault, since CME had "no control over the disposition of customer segregated funds that are held by MF Global and not by CME Clearing."
Their on-site review of MF Global's operations the week before its bankruptcy suggested that the brokerage firm was in full compliance of all the rules, so it wasn't really the CME's problem. But of course it was their problem. That's what the CME is there for -- to protect clients in cases of fraud or bankruptcy. To protect the "integrity of the exchange."
In the weeks that have passed, a curious web of transactions has surfaced between MF Global, JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs. Before its bankruptcy, MF Global had been drawing down a $1.2 billion revolving line of credit with JPMorgan.
In bankruptcy court, JPMorgan was able to negotiate a lien on some of MF Global's assets in exchange for paying $8 million toward bankruptcy costs. According to Reuters, "The lien puts JPMorgan's interests ahead of MF Global customers who have not yet received an estimated $900 million worth of money from their accounts, which remain frozen as regulators search for missing funds."
It is also alleged that JPMorgan accepted a roughly $200 million transfer from MF Global the day before its bankruptcy to cover an overdraft in MF Global's trading account held with them (it still isn't clear if JPMorgan has the cash).
MF Global also appears to have sold hundreds of millions worth of securities to Goldman Sachs in the days leading up to its collapse, but did not immediately receive payment for them from the MF Global's clearing firm, none other than JPMorgan.
To be fair, on Nov. 22, the CME did offer to pledge $550 million as a guarantee to the SIPC Trustee in the event that they did not recover all of the missing client funds, but we cynically wonder if that pledge was made after they finally figured out where all the money had gone. The CME seems to have had a good idea by early December, based on comments made by Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) member Jill Sommers.
The bottom line is that MF Global's client interests and security appear to have been side-stepped to buy time for bigger, more important players to cover their losses (asses), and that is not the way the regulatory system is supposed to function. We're not naïve -- we know the government will always protect the interests of the big banks over paltry retail investors, but do they have to be so brazen about it? The MF Global episode is basically shameless.
Then there's Dodd-Frank.
Remember Dodd-Frank? It's the massive financial regulatory reform act that was signed into law by President Obama back in 2010. We are certainly not fans of cumbersome overregulation, but in its essence, Dodd-Frank was supposed to provide a new framework to address the potential failure of a too-big-to-fail bank.
There's nothing wrong with that. Given the sheer size of the off-balance sheet derivatives market, we don't see a problem with at least attempting to prepare for another large scale banking failure in the U.S. But almost two years later, we have to laugh at how little of the Dodd-Frank framework has actually been implemented.
According to law firm Davis Polk, a mere 21% of the act's 400 rulemaking requirements have become finalized since the law passed in July 2010. Of the 200 Dodd-Frank rulemaking requirement deadlines that have already passed, 74.5% of them have been missed to date. The lawyers must be having a field day with all the paperwork.
One part of the Dodd-Frank story that interests us is the CFTC positions limits rule set to go into effect on Jan. 17, 2012. The new position limits are aimed at preventing excessive speculation in the commodity markets, which are believed by many, including ourselves, to have driven wild fluctuations in the gold and silver spot price over the past decade.
Position limits are an obvious threat to large futures speculators like the big banks, so it was no surprise when two Wall Street lobby groups, the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association (SIFMA) and the International Swaps and Derivatives Association (ISDA), launched a lawsuit against the CFTC demanding that the new rules on commodity trading be thrown out, or at the very least, delayed.
The CFTC voted on the request to delay implementation and officially rebuffed it on Jan. 4, which is a heartening development in an otherwise cynical saga. Back in December, however, the CFTC had already quietly waived the position limit filing requirements on all CME participants until May 31, 2012.
So even if the new rules go into effect this month, banks won't have to report their position levels until May 31 either way. Given the lobby groups' outstanding lawsuit against the new rules, combined with the CFTC's apparent tendency to grant temporary reprieves, we don't expect the new position limit rules to be enforced any time soon.
Once summer approaches, there will probably be more delays and more deferrals, granting the big players plenty of time to protect themselves. Extend and pretend. Delay and defer. That's the song we sing on the merry-go-round.
Then there's Europe and the European Central Bank (ECB). Back in December, the mighty ECB had to step in with yet another massive liquidity injection to avert a total meltdown in the EU banking system. On Dec. 21, they flooded 523 separate EU banks with a "Long Term Refinancing Operation" (LTRO) program totaling €489.1 billion ($626 billion).
The program consists of loans that are due in three years and will charge an accommodating 1% interest rate. The liquidity injection will allow the EU banks to participate in a delightfully convenient carry-trade whereby they can take the borrowed money at 1% interest and invest it in various sovereign debt auctions that will likely pay them 3% or higher.
The banks will keep the difference in profit, and the EU PIIGS countries get to breathe easier knowing they'll be able to sell their garbage paper to the EU banks at suppressed rates as long as the LTRO loan money lasts. And the best part? It doesn't involve any money printing, so there's really no risk of inflation, you see?
So just so we're on the same page, if everything goes according to plan this year, European sovereign governments will fund their debt auctions with borrowed money lent to them by over 500 European banks who have themselves borrowed hundreds of billions of euros from the European Central Bank... who as far as we can tell, borrowed those euros from the various EU sovereign states (or simply printed them).
Do you get it? Do you see the circularity? Do you see the can being kicked down the road? And guess what? Since €489.1 billion is clearly not enough to avert disaster this year (most EU banks are so undercapitalized they've simply parked the borrowed LTRO money back with the ECB at 0.25% interest), the ECB has promised to launch another LTRO injection this coming February!
No wonder gold was down in December. They completely solved the European debt crisis!
Last but not least, we must mention an alarming component of this year's National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) that was quietly signed into law by President Obama on Dec. 31, 2011. This year's defense bill, officially known as Senate Bill 1867, includes a specific provision that seems to grant the U.S. government the power to detain accused terrorists, including U.S. citizens, indefinitely, without trial.
There has been much uproar and confusion over the language used in the sections of the bill related to the subject, and it's still not clear how the bill will change the existing laws related to terrorism detention in the U.S., but it doesn't bode well for constitutional freedom within the country.
There's obviously no direct market impact to the legislation, but we mention it only to remind investors how quickly the rules can change when governments feel vulnerable. "Political risk" should no longer only be applied to mining investments in third-world countries. In 2012, it may apply to us all.
It's very difficult to predict what lies in store for the stock market this year. Anything could happen. Government intervention in the financial system has never been more extreme.
We hope the examples above have shed some light on that. As we enter 2012, there are significant debt-related financial risks festering within the three great economic theatres of the world: the U.S., Europe and China.
The market may rally, it could crash, it could tread water, we just don't know. A lot will depend on how the central banks react. But we are eager to maintain the positioning that we held in 2011.
We will maintain our exposure to precious metals equities and bullion. We will maintain our large gross short weightings in our hedge funds. We are confident that they will protect us on this farcical merry-go-round that seems to spin faster and faster with every passing day.
Editor's Note: This piece is the third in an installment of three. To read the article in its original format and to read the previous pieces, click here.
Posted at 2012-01-24 11:16:01
I have heard a rumor that Big financial Institutions are going to have the opportunity to bid on packaged large blocks of foreclosed homes that are currently carried by FNMA.
I also heard that the bids will likely be 15% to 20% of the current Mortgage and the bundles will contain 1000's of houses
Any truth to this rumor?


EterioH
Posted at 2012-01-28 11:41:11
THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM IS FARcE AND COMPLICATED
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